Merkley, Connolly Lead Bicameral Push to Help Afghans at Risk of Starvation
Washington,
February 11, 2022
With one million children at risk of starvation in Afghanistan, Oregon’s U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley and U.S. Representative Gerry Connolly (D-VA-11) led a group of 24 lawmakers to sound the alarm bell about the country’s dire hunger crisis and economic collapse and urge the Biden Administration to continue addressing these humanitarian issues. In a letter sent to Secretary Antony Blinken and Secretary Janet Yellen, the lawmakers welcome the Biden administration’s announcement today to release Afghanistan’s frozen assets to pay for food and other emergency needs, as well as the $308 million contribution announced last month toward the United Nation’s Afghanistan 2022 appeal. Still, the lawmakers continue to express their concern that more needs to be done.
“According to the United Nations, 22.8 million Afghans – or more than half of the country’s population – will face acute food insecurity this winter, and one million children risk dying of malnutrition,” wrote the lawmakers. “The UN Development Programme estimates that 97 percent of Afghans are in danger of falling below the poverty line. A combination of the Taliban’s economic mismanagement, overly restrictive sanctions regimes that could be better targeted, the freezing of at least $9 billion of the country’s overseas assets, and the abrupt suspension of multilateral and bilateral assistance that previously accounted for 75 percent of Afghanistan’s public expenditures, have given rise to a dire liquidity crisis that has constrained nearly all sectors of the Afghan economy, from the financing of food imports to salary payments for civil servants and the functioning of basic services. Experts warn that, without urgent action, more Afghan civilians will die in the coming months than died in the last 20 years of war.
“Reinjecting liquidity into the Afghan economy and ensuring a smooth and effective humanitarian response are interlinked,” they continued.“Without a reliable mechanism for payments, NGOs have struggled to make financial transactions to pay their employees, let alone scale up their operations to meet the demands of a humanitarian crisis of such extreme proportions. Nor will it be technically feasible for NGOs and humanitarian partners to cover the entirety of Afghanistan’s food supply. In both the immediate and long term, Afghans need not just bags of flour but also a viable currency, access to the international financial system as well as international reserve assets, and trade financing to support food sales and essential government-run services.”
The lawmakers recommend implementing thefollowing steps that are both commensurate with the scale and urgency of Afghanistan’s economic freefall, but also avoid emboldening an odious regime like the Taliban:
In addition to Merkley and Connolly, the letter was signed by U.S. Senators Edward J. Markey (D-MA), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), and U.S. RepresentativesSara Jacobs (D-CA-53), Tom Malinowski (D-NJ-07), Dina Titus (D-NV-01), James P. McGovern (D-MA-02), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Colin Allred (D-TX-32), Peter Welch (D-VT), Abigail Spanberger (D-VA-07), Scott H. Peters (D-Ca-52), Juan Vargas (D-CA-51), Marc Veasey (D-TX-33), Raúl M. Grijalva (D-AZ-03), Donald S. Beyer Jr. (D-VA-08), André Carson (D-IN-07), Jared Huffman (D-CA-02), Grace Meng (D-NY-06), Danny K. Davis (New Party-IL-07), David Trone (D-MD-06), John B. Larson (D-CT-01), and Rick Larsen (D-WA-02).
Full text of the letter follows below and can be found here:
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February 11, 2022
Dear Secretary Blinken and Secretary Yellen:
We write to express our deep concern about Afghanistan’s looming famine and economic collapse in the aftermath of the Taliban’s takeover as well as our support for continued, urgent steps on the part of the Biden administration to address the financial drivers of the hunger crisis. We welcome the administration’s initial U.S. contribution of $308 million toward the United Nations’ 2022 Afghanistan appeal – the largest single country aid appeal in the UN’s history – on top of the $474 million in direct humanitarian assistance the United States has already provided in 2021 to the Afghan people and to Afghan refugees in the region. We also applaud the administration’s decision to pursue the release of Afghanistan’s frozen assets to pay for food and other emergency needs in Afghanistan, while keeping the funds out of the hands of the Taliban and other malicious actors.
We share your concern that humanitarian relief alone will not be sufficient to prevent innocent Afghans from dying of starvation as drought and harsh winter conditions intersect with a complete paralysis of the financial sector. We request that the State and Treasury Departments continue to adopt measures to address Afghanistan’s liquidity shortage and isolation from the international banking system, which will be imperative in both the short and long term to stave off what is fast becoming the world’s worst humanitarian disaster.[1] According to the United Nations, 22.8 million Afghans – or more than half of the country’s population – will face acute food insecurity this winter, and one million children risk dying of malnutrition. The UN Development Programme estimates that 97 percent of Afghans are in danger of falling below the poverty line. A combination of the Taliban’s economic mismanagement, overly restrictive sanctions regimes that could be better targeted, the freezing of at least $9 billion of the country’s overseas assets, and the abrupt suspension of multilateral and bilateral assistance that previously accounted for 75 percent of Afghanistan’s public expenditures, have given rise to a dire liquidity crisis that has constrained nearly all sectors of the Afghan economy, from the financing of food imports to salary payments for civil servants and the functioning of basic services. Experts warn that, without urgent action, more Afghan civilians will die in the coming months than died in the last 20 years of war.
Reinjecting liquidity into the Afghan economy and ensuring a smooth and effective humanitarian response are interlinked: without a reliable mechanism for payments, NGOs have struggled to make financial transactions to pay their employees, let alone scale up their operations to meet the demands of a humanitarian crisis of such extreme proportions. Nor will it be technically feasible for NGOs and humanitarian partners to cover the entirety of Afghanistan’s food supply. In both the immediate and long term, Afghans need not just bags of flour but also a viable currency, access to the international financial system as well as international reserve assets, and trade financing to support food sales and essential government-run services. To build on your efforts, we recommend the following steps that we believe are truly commensurate with the scale and urgency of the country’s economic freefall, and avoid emboldening an odious regime like the Taliban:
In the first instance, with appropriate controls in place, the United States should support an independent and technocratic Afghan central bank free from Taliban interference.[2] Where possible, the U.S. should prioritize efforts to find new ways of working within existing institutions like the Central Bank—with enhanced oversight and safeguards in place—to avoid the immense challenges of building up entirely new mechanisms and potential pitfalls of parallel economic systems as we have seen in countries like Yemen. One strong proposal is to allow the monthly release of small tranches of frozen assets in quantities necessary to permit the central bank to conduct monetary policy and avert a collapse of the financial system, while maintaining the ability to end such transfers immediately if the money were diverted for other purposes.[3] In the event of Taliban obstruction, however, another option could be to explore alternative solutions to inject liquidity into the economy quickly, including through private banks in Afghanistan or by temporarily deputizing an Afghan private bank to assume some of the core functions of the central banking system.[4] Other smaller scale solutions include unfreezingthe foreign assets of certain verified Afghan individuals and corporations.[5]
The political and technical challenges of unlocking international financing in Afghanistan – while ensuring that such financing reaches the Afghan people directly – are onerous. Yet the humanitarian and national security consequences of a prolonged liquidity crisis are far worse: manmade famine, forced migration, increased drug production, and a heightened threat from transnational jihadist groups operating from Afghanistan. The burdens of universal poverty are certain to fall most heavily on women, girls, and other vulnerable members of Afghan society who the Biden administration has pledged to help protect.
We look forward to working with you on this urgent issue.
Sincerely,
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